DUGGIE FIELDS:"SYD BARRETT was my flat mate" This is Duggie's guide to Syd's room & his life there

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  • čas přidán 17. 02. 2022
  • #sydbarrett #pinkfloyd #davidgilmour
    **If you love this interview PLEASE CONSIDER HITTING THE "$ SUPERTHANKS $" button !
    (It's under the video. ) Any small donation helps with my work - retrieving, editing & uploading my unique and original content. Thank you for your support ! John **
    Between 1968 and 1970 artist Duggie Fields shared his flat in London with the Pink Floyd co-founder Syd Barrett, shortly after Syd had left the band.
    In this remarkable 2001 interview, he describes how he watched Syd struggle to adapt outside Pink Floyd and how he witnessed Syd's struggle with his creativity and his sanity.
    RIP DUGGIE FIELDS. Aug 6 1945 - 7 March 2021
    THIS IS THE FULL 2001 INTERVIEW RECENTLY RETRIEVED FROM TAPES. FIRST RELEASE FEB 18TH 2022
    PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY JOHN EDGINTON FOR THE DOCUMENTARY : "THE PINK FLOYD AND SYD BARRETT STORY". • The Pink Floyd & Syd B...
    © OTMOOR PRODUCTIONS LTD 2001.
    FOR PLAYLIST OF ALL MY PINK FLOYD INTERVIEWS :
    • PINK FLOYD UNFILTERED
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Komentáře • 202

  • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
    @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před 6 měsíci +3

    Thanks for viewing this video ! Please subscribe for more of my amazing original Pink Floyd / Syd Barrett interviews!
    Rock On !! John

    • @joshjuanfifarek7382
      @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 3 měsíci

      Is there more at the end where he talks about the fan Duggie let play in Syds old room? I thought he talked about this further???

  • @EpicFroggz
    @EpicFroggz Před rokem +17

    Wow, when he was describing how Syd became more withdrawn and just worse... I almost cried. And his quote about laying in bed, endless possibilities but no motivation to do them, feeling limited by time and by yourself... I feel that a lot, thank you for sharing. Enjoyed listening to Duggie too, I like how he paused to think and say what he genuinely wanted to say

  • @thomasjoseph4718
    @thomasjoseph4718 Před rokem +62

    I used to work with Gala Pinion at the Chelsea Drugstore in the late 60s and often visited this flat. I remember Syd Barrett . He was rather quiet and withdrawn with rather staring eyes. Given that he was a celebrity on the London music scene, he was, I suppose, rather intimidating, but I don't remember him being at all unpleasant or rude. I spent quite a lot of time speaking to Duggie Fields. He was a hard working and meticulous artist. His work was very much of the moment - very fashionable - but very well crafted. He was a very nice guy, down to earth, unpretentious and easy to get along with. I think Syd Barrett was very fortunate to be sharing a flat with someone so sensible and "grounded". I am sure he was a great help to Syd.

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před rokem +7

      Thanks for your thoughtful insights

    • @professormacdeezy
      @professormacdeezy Před rokem +3

      thanks for sharing

    • @elle26426
      @elle26426 Před rokem +3

      Yes, thanks for sharing your story.

    • @BushyHairedStranger
      @BushyHairedStranger Před rokem +4

      15:38,..hits the nail on the head!…I absolutely agree with this Philosophy, it’s no wonder he looks so young! Seriously, a very astute and knowledgeable Artist. My aunt Jenny is a Professional Artist, has a PhD & Masters in Art. At age 73 she looks and still produces Art lime she’s still 30 years young.
      I believe that if you truly manifest doing what you love, you slow or even interrupt cellular decrepitude…why not?

    • @pamelasmith4594
      @pamelasmith4594 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I visited Duggie between 1968 and 1970. He was one of the kindest and creative people I’ve ever met. Now I see he was very thoughtful and intelligent. He gave me some lovely fabric designs which I wish I still had. I am glad I met Syd Barrett and David Gilmore if only once, the experience remains very memorable. I was sorry to hear Duggie had passed on. What a creative scene that flat was in Wetherby Mansions.

  • @sgg6927
    @sgg6927 Před rokem +17

    Gilmour seemed like a good friend to Syd even after he replaced him.

    • @EHoser1
      @EHoser1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      David made sure Syd got his royalties and even insisted on including some of his songs in live concerts that were released on CD just to get him some more. I saw a quote somewhere that the year that Syd died his income was over a million pounds from royalties. I also think that without Gilmour's help Syd's solo albums would never have been completed.

  • @ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz
    @ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz Před rokem +27

    R.I.P. Duggie. It must’ve been so annoying to be constantly asked stuff about somebody else instead of about his art.

    • @joshjuanfifarek7382
      @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Duggie was the most relaxed guy I ever met. He pretty much loved talking about anything especially old friends. I'm glad I got to know you Duggie. ❤

  • @neilus
    @neilus Před rokem +13

    I always think there is something incredibly profound in the story that Syd painted himself into a corner and couldnt get out, like it symbolised his situation somehow.

    • @GA-gd3wi
      @GA-gd3wi Před rokem +1

      If you watch the movie The Wall you get that same impression. I think it was inspired by Syd.

  • @sratus
    @sratus Před rokem +15

    'I knew he was lying in bed sort of thinking, my interpretation was that he was thinking, that while he lay there he had the possibility of doing anything in the world that he chose but the minute he made a choice he was limiting his possibilities so he lay there as long as he could so he had this unlimited future but of course that's a very limited present when you do that and a very depressing one ultimately so i think he actually got quite depressed.'
    Christ, he's just described my entire twenties.

  • @Craigdhouston
    @Craigdhouston Před 11 měsíci +7

    Duggie appears to be a very gentle soul, and also speaks with a warmth about Syd. Also, he doesn’t speak ill of him, just honestly based on his recollections. Very sad that he passed away. A great talent.

    • @pamelasmith4594
      @pamelasmith4594 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yes Duggie was always kind and honest and totally authentic when I visited him - there was always tea and biscuits and his wonderful art. I’ve enjoyed this interview no end and I am very sorry to hear dear Duggie has passed away.

  • @dreamwell2020
    @dreamwell2020 Před rokem +13

    I love that bit about how when Syd refinised the floorboards, he painted himself into a corner.

    • @jimmorrissy2276
      @jimmorrissy2276 Před rokem +3

      Yeah that was funny.

    • @elle26426
      @elle26426 Před rokem +2

      Yes, I loved that querky bit.

    • @Eckyredtheunready
      @Eckyredtheunready Před rokem +3

      kinda sounds like a metaphor for his behaviour as well, he painted himself into a corner and ultimately couldn't get out.

  • @professormacdeezy
    @professormacdeezy Před rokem +16

    "unlimited future but limited presence" that sentence says a lot

    • @professormacdeezy
      @professormacdeezy Před rokem +4

      one of the most sympathetic and insightful opinions on barrett in my opinion

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 Před rokem

      reminds me of the main protagonist of everything everywhere all at once

    • @108grog
      @108grog Před 9 měsíci

      It's been said of spiritual students, if they open their inner eye too quickly - unprepared - without a skilled mentor (guru) to instruct and provide care, it may create serious and permanent(?) damage.
      Syd became psychically crippled.

  • @stephenthestoryteller3139

    It’s refreshing to see a different perspective on Syd from a credible source.

  • @mikesmith1485
    @mikesmith1485 Před 5 měsíci +4

    What a lovely, gentle soul. Rest in peace, Duggie. x

  • @user-wo7dl6tb2q
    @user-wo7dl6tb2q Před 2 lety +12

    I met Duggie when I worked for Comme des Garçons in early 2000’s. He collaborated his art w/some clothing & modeled on the runway! He was very sweet & funny!

  • @chadpittman3025
    @chadpittman3025 Před 2 lety +8

    Duggie Fields phenomenal artist, check out what he did with that room

  • @joshjuanfifarek7382
    @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 3 měsíci +5

    If people want to know what happened, if anything did or lack of, Duggie is THE one who makes it crystal clear. Don't bother looking for answers in any of these repetitive documentaries. Duggie is the one who sets it straight. Perhaps Jenny Spires and Gayla also. But this interview answers all the questions. Duggie never sugar coated anything. I miss him for that. Our talks to wee hours about modern art. Technologies and film. Duggie was a very sweet person with a very deep mind. Miss you Duggie.

  • @christophercruz8359
    @christophercruz8359 Před 2 lety +10

    I was just thinking about this a few days ago, and thought, "I'd like to see more of that interview with Duggie Fields". I like the way he handled the fans who assumed Syd still lived there.

  • @chadpittman3025
    @chadpittman3025 Před 2 lety +7

    Very charismatic man his self. A great artist Dougie fields

  • @clubemec
    @clubemec Před 10 měsíci +7

    Thank you for posting such a wonderful and informative interview ❤

  • @johni9073
    @johni9073 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Thanks so very much John, for making your fascinating and deeply thought provoking interviews about Syd Barrett so easily accessible on CZcams.
    This one, along with the later interview with Richard Wright even more so.
    In part because of the apparent contradictions in interpretations of Syd's creative genius. Duggie seems to emphasise the need for Syd to be creative, at least as a song writer and musician, if perhaps not as a visual artist, as a part of a group project with all interacting - something that Richard emphasises too in discussing what he considered to be Pink Floyd's best creative moments.
    Is there a particular reason why you didn't develop this line with Richard in the later interview: that Syd's creative inspiration declined, according to Duggie, mainly because - as he supposes - of Syd's later isolation and withdrawal - that is, for social reasons in terms of creativity. Whereas Richard seems to suggest it was largely due to the psychological reasons attributable either to drug taking, or as Roger Waters emphasises more, to developing schizophrenia?

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před 10 měsíci +3

      Thanks for your very perceptive comments. It may be that both Duggie and Richard's insights were valid. Syd's creativity was not a constant . At a certain point with the band, the tap was turned off - probably due to his acid intake. At a later stage, when living with Duggie, his social isolation was manifest and his creative output was a slow dripping from the tap. (Forgive the metaphor !)

    • @johni9073
      @johni9073 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES Thanks for your reply John. I sometimes wonder if the discussion about Barrett and LSD in particular, is too focussed on rather 'scientific' aspects, still very often suppositions really, given the huge variety of reactions to taking LSD.
      Could another interpretation be one that seems to me to be unspoken by your interviewees, but there nonetheless: that Syd simply decided, perhaps rather firmly given the reactions to his withdrawal, NOT to communicate "rationally" - simply because he didn't want to at this stage. After all, his success meant that he could sustain his life without any real need to 'work' in a conventional sense. He was not without funds, food or a place to live (or was he ever?)
      Duggie makes the interesting point about "being famous" and Syd's brutally honest comments on that. He wasn't sure whether he wanted this fame, though had been seduced at times by its attractions, as the other group members suggest. Could his experiences up to and around 1967 more simply be seen as coming to a decision, perhaps aided by LSD taking, that the public attention of "fame", especially controversial (which seems to appeal more to say, Roger Waters) wasn't what he wanted. (Was this why Ronnie Laing couldn't 'deal' with him?) With the big motivator, even if "child-like" of not wanting to be told what to do, and the blank staring response looking right through you that so many have reported, being the strategy for cutting off communication in this way.
      I find that understandable, if a bit extreme at times (but he was obviously the focus of huge and very intrusive attention), bizarre perhaps, but not "mad" - as Syd's doctor brother is said to have declared on this topic.
      (Indeed, did you try to approach any of Syd's family for interviews in this context?)
      In particular, as a student of French literature, Mick Rock's comments about 19th century French literary influences in the social circles that Syd frequented, resonate with me.
      Syd Barrett seems to me to be very inspired by another poet with a very small, literary output, almost completely produced as a teenager with accompanying "fame" and controversy - indeed notoriety, accompanied with drug taking (especially abuse of absinthe) - rejected and who then switched off for another life in Ethiopia: Arthur Rimbaud.
      I think of Rimbaud's desire to disorder all his sense impressions as a means for inspiration and for being poetically creative to see something true, and say something new.
      His brilliant poem "Seven-year old poets" (with a powerful musical version by Leo Ferre) says it all for me, even if Syd comes over as a far gentler personality than Rimbaud.

  • @ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz
    @ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz Před 2 měsíci +3

    I have the impression the general public and the midia wants to keep relevant the whole folkloric thing of the “massive amounts of drug that drove Syd into madness” It sells books and records, it keeps a business rolling. Duggie (R.I.P.) had a very clear view of what happened around him, very believable and down to earth testimony. Beautiful interview. Thanks for posting.

  • @mikem1980
    @mikem1980 Před rokem +6

    this is such a cool interview. Duggie offered a valuable and exceedingly rare perspective as someone who spent, assumedly, the most time any person could have spent with Syd during this period. his framing of Syd's state is particularly grounded and it makes him come off with a very credible aura compared to some other sources

  • @joshjuanfifarek7382
    @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Thamks for this post
    We all miss Duggie. Miss the late night talks wirh him. A guy who ate art for breakfast .Everyone loved those randi mannies. Bring back the love drugs. Out with the dark ones.

  • @nickdebenedetto2267
    @nickdebenedetto2267 Před rokem +7

    i've never seen thins and i thought I'd consumed ALL Syd related interviews out there.
    i really appreciate how Duggie makes it a point that Syd's conditon was gradual to the point where he wasn't even aware of it happening until later reflection.
    i also like that he comments on all the rumors and bogus stories that stem from many of the books written about Syd.
    I've heard many non-celebrities that were close to Syd say that he lacked ambition/motivation despite having immense talent. i think this is a big factor that doesn't get enough weight in the Syd narrative. where did that ambition go? clearly, he had ambition to learn guitar, write poetry/lyrics, travel to London, rehearse a lot, get up on stage to perform, etc etc.
    Even if he did take loads of acid as many insist, why would it destroy his motivation? was he depressed more than "mad"?
    laying around in bed all day is not unheard of for guys in their early 20s, especially during those long winters in London.
    despite it all...
    the part that makes me feel as though Syd was truly mentally ill and the wall was just "so high" that he couldn't overcome it was Duggie's comments about Syd degressing to a point where he had to be told what to do and behaved like an "obedient child". that is truly sad and is a sign that he was indeed mentally ill. and Acid probably wouldn't have caused that. a catalyst, maybe. a direct cause, no

    • @TheRocknrollmaniac
      @TheRocknrollmaniac Před rokem +9

      Yeah, very insightful interview; depression is never mentioned in the context of Syd's change, probably because it's not as "interesting" as schizophrenia, in the same way that we don't really take care of depression as a society.
      The behaviors mentioned by Duggie are really indicative of depression; Syd didn't do much, lay around in bed all day; he simply couldn't motivate himself to do things, and then there's also the bizarre part. After living like this for a few years, you change and it's hard to come back.

    • @lastman7409
      @lastman7409 Před 5 měsíci +1

      from wikipedia: Chronic catatonia-like breakdown or autistic catatonia refers to a functional decline seen in some patients with pre-existing autism spectrum disorder and/or intellectual disability which usually runs a chronic-progressive course and encompasses attenuated catatonic symptoms as well as mood and anxiety symptoms that increasingly interfere with adaptive functioning. Onset is typically insidious and often mistaken for background autistic symptoms. Slowing of voluntary movement, reduced speech, aboulia, increased prompt dependency and obsessive-compulsive symptoms are frequently seen; negativism, (auto-)aggressive behaviors and ill-defined hallucinations have also been reported. Both the causes of this disorder as well as its prognosis appear to be heterogenous, with most patients showing partial recovery upon treatment. It seems to be related to chronic stress as a result of life transitions, loss of external time structuring, sensory sensitivities and/or traumatic experiences, co-morbid mental disorders, or other unknown causes. Since clinical catatonia can not always be diagnosed, this condition has also been renamed to the more general term "late regression".[14][15

  • @joshjuanfifarek7382
    @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 10 měsíci +3

    We miss you Duggie. From Around the corner ❤

  • @John-zn4lp
    @John-zn4lp Před 5 měsíci +3

    At 15:35 is the most insightful and understanding of Syd's condition I've ever heard of his condition and its progression over time. Syd definitely had a mental condition that prevented him from getting back to his former self, for lack of a better way to say it. Thank you so much for this interview.

  • @KETEBOWERS
    @KETEBOWERS Před rokem +7

    I came across this video by accident watched it found it very interesting, however I really love the artwork in the background ! 😎🎶

  • @paulnolan4971
    @paulnolan4971 Před rokem +6

    R.I.P. Duggie

  • @ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz
    @ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz Před 7 měsíci +3

    This man was there! He sounds believable and grounded. Great video of a person that apparently somehow survived that crazy period. Thanks for the upload.

  • @outtathyme5679
    @outtathyme5679 Před 2 lety +7

    Fascinating

  • @stephensams9784
    @stephensams9784 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I visited Wetherby Mansions last year, it's a lovely area.

  • @billbarrett6285
    @billbarrett6285 Před rokem +5

    I wish Duggie had written a book about his life and friendships.

  • @Swat-ed5bt
    @Swat-ed5bt Před 2 lety +6

    Doug is a nice guy 🤩

  • @bigboxbobby2
    @bigboxbobby2 Před rokem +6

    Lovely interview

  • @outtathyme5679
    @outtathyme5679 Před 2 lety +9

    Btw that the flat where Mick Rock shot those iconic photos

  • @koenraad4618
    @koenraad4618 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Syd's dad died when Syd was just 16 years of age, perhaps that caused his depression and odd behavior later on. He was a brilliant musical artist but not so brilliant graphic artist, so when he left his band he slowly became aware how much he had burned, and he was very much in denial of this at first. Professional psychological treatment and a new band life would have been Syd's best option. I like Duggie's iconic artwork very much, the painting of Michael Jackson for instance, it is very good. Duggie Field had a unique eye for composition and he looked like a character from his art work.

  • @Josouto1
    @Josouto1 Před rokem +4

    What Syd could do was just amazing.

  • @PinkFloydCollectors
    @PinkFloydCollectors Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you for sharing…

  • @markwilliams7054
    @markwilliams7054 Před rokem +3

    There's something so haunting about how Syd moved through life after Pink Floyd

  • @MrHmm300
    @MrHmm300 Před rokem +7

    This is a VERY interresting inteview to watch..! Really, one of the most, maybe THE most interesting piece talking about Syd that I've encountered. Brings way more depth and nuance to the story, really. And I'm someone who actually has been quite a fan, and dug quite a bit in the story of Syd, how and why things went the way they did.
    I also have a hard time seeing that he just would have... "Dropped" it because of 'dropping it', so to say? Haha. But it for sure can take you places inside yourself, and the whole aspect of him loosing motivation and direction is very interesting. He expressed earlier during he pink floyd-years, that what they were doing at that point just is a tip of the iceberg, kind of. He had huge visions and ideas (one could be exemplified with, the setup with saxophone and quire that the band implemented like five years later, when first basically calling him loony for the idea, haha).
    And. as Duggie expresses it, that he kind of felt that he limited himself by even making a choice, haha. That's an amazing observation. He always changed the forms of his songs quite erratically later years, and in general, was playing and experimenting with life. It's also true. Once you set your mind on something specific, you DO limit yourself. You prioritize one thing over others, and yes, for sure, you will most likely miss some possibilities and opportunities when doing so.
    Here the possibility of drug-related issues may enter. Blowing your mind open so to the extend that the regular way of prioritizing information and possibilities gets lost. That, I'd say, is probably not the most unusual sideeffect of playing with mind-altering drugs.
    Loosing oneself in the world of possibilities is a tricky buizz.. Relateable question for many searching creative types, I believe. Seeing/understanding/feeling enough, and to have experienced some quite marvellous stuff. But here some old wise saying comes into place. "Beware of unearned wisdom".
    If you can't understand what to do with the experience you have, or have had, and can't integrate it properly and ground yourself with this new "knowledge", then you just may end up in a space of "everything is possible and happens at the same time", kind of. And it's for sure true, that entering thes worlds, comes with a bit of darkness as well. There are very dark possible aspects of experience as well, shadows to the oppurtunities and love one can reach.
    Well. That's a light psychological reasoning analysis, I guess. Haha.
    Adding, the aspect that he didn't like the fame or business around the whole package, for sure, haha, it kind of makes sens to loose the drive..
    Oh, if someone with experience of Carl Jungs work had gotten to him, or by all means, if he just would had found his way to something like yoga maybe, who knows what could have been.
    We live, we learn. We love Syd, and we can cherish what he managed to do, and get in contact with. Now, it's up to us to take it on, and try to do the integration that's needed. Deeper understanding, more grounding in the process, and further on, more love.
    Peace, felllow Sydiots and searching souls

  • @johni9073
    @johni9073 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for posting this, John. I'm not a Barrett specialist, but what Fields has to say makes me think about how influential, late 19th century, French literary influences were on some people in this time and place.
    Fields mentions Baudelaire, Verlaine, Rimbaud, Mallarmé, and when I think also of the connections from the Cambridge University intellectual types, the UFO club musicians onwards, with people like those in and around Soft Machine (the French literary influences are explicit in the album Soft Machine Volume 2) then things make a lot of sense to me.
    This is like Rimbaud in particular, with his attempts to take all "rules" out of experience: the "dérèglement de tous les ses" and his "Season in Hell", as a means for triggering amazingly original creativity.
    This would strongly suggest that the "acid casualty" stuff is connected to quite an explicable background in cultural thinking.
    (Very ironic that a guy so into "the scene" and this existential way of thinking as Ronnie Laing, couldn't handle Syd Barrett!)
    Given Barrett's later life, the idea of madness, brain damage and the like, sounds all too superficial to me, as an attempt to explain in overly rationalised, "scientific" terms.
    The whole point in Rimbaud's creative period (also very short) was to be deliberately against thinking as a "rational" being, to escape the conventions of rules and the limitations they impose on the senses.
    The associates that Dave Gilmour writes off as evil (and Dave also specialised somewhat in French!), and perhaps so in destructive effect they could well have been, would be interesting to hear from. Have any of them ever been interviewed on their side of this fascinating story?

  • @billbarrett6285
    @billbarrett6285 Před rokem +4

    Duggie would have been a very interesting person to get to know. He seems quite intelligent and I would liked to have known him.

  • @shapes2000
    @shapes2000 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I have been enjoying all the rushes from your interviews. What a great way of preserving important cultural history and thank you for taking the time to release all this material. What a great artist Duggie was, I bet he had a thousand amazing stories from all the people who had met over the years.

  • @papalaz4444244
    @papalaz4444244 Před 3 měsíci +2

    This guy knows the truth. Drug consumption is most often a symptom of a problem, not the cause.

  • @alexvernon7456
    @alexvernon7456 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you so much for this! Amazing, duggie was such a cool guy (RIP). Interesting how all the bad members and duggie had different ideas on Syd and what went wrong with him. Incredible that you did so many great interviews in such a small space of time. I hope that you upload the uncut one with mick rock. Did you interview Storm?

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks. I’ll be putting mick rock’s interview up when I get the time. I did a Storm interview for my ‘wish you were here ‘ doc.

    • @alexvernon7456
      @alexvernon7456 Před 2 lety +2

      @@JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES thank you John

  • @flamingcow83
    @flamingcow83 Před 2 lety +1

    Grazie 1000

  • @John-zn4lp
    @John-zn4lp Před 5 měsíci +5

    I believe Syd enjoyed the free form style of early Floyd music, but when it became constrained, and it became more like a job than art or freedom of expression, it was just not what he felt comfortable with. Surely, when Dave took the reigns of lead guitar player, and Dave certainly was and is a more tight and styled player than Syd, he probably felt where the band was going, and starting slowly drifting away. I know I'll want to rephrase this, but this is my gut feelings at the moment.

  • @fredzep01
    @fredzep01 Před 2 lety +2

    hello John, did you shoot this for a floyd documentary, and are these outtakes ?.. it's just i am sure i have seen this somewhere but i cant place it.... anyway brilliant as usual, thanks for taking the time to show us your priceless interviews...

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před 2 lety +2

      Outtakes. And yes you’ve seen some of the clips in my Syd/floyd doc

    • @fredzep01
      @fredzep01 Před 2 lety +2

      @@JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      Ok, that's where i have seen Duggie before.
      John all your outtakes are more informative than the documentaries they are taken from.
      All the people that are in them give their insights so freely you must have a calming influence on them. I am still impressed the way you got Chester Thompson to sit for you for so long, not only that he all so looked comfortable. You know only to well people tend to clam up when it's time to roll.
      Keep them coming mate...

  • @haroldfinch8481
    @haroldfinch8481 Před rokem +7

    Thank you for all these Syd interviews. Very enlightening. Someone really should have talked to Duggie about that haircut though, and the eyebrows.

    • @Stewartchampion
      @Stewartchampion Před rokem +5

      I kinda dig the guys hair n his style...he's unique....and different..love his art work .just checked out loads of his stuff..he's defo one to check ...you Don't get to many people like him.... in a class of his own with art and his out look on life...and his unique style of dressing.... I find the guy very interesting...best to be different than be the same as every one else.. tho I do agree with the eye brows ..but he is a walking piece of art ...his whole house has been touched by his artistic ways....what a very unique guy . Any how take care all the best 👍

    • @haroldfinch8481
      @haroldfinch8481 Před rokem

      @@Stewartchampion awesome reply. Appreciate your take on it. Just takin a crack at being funny.

    • @Stewartchampion
      @Stewartchampion Před rokem +1

      @@haroldfinch8481 all is cool..they are defo 100% uniquely original eye brows. You wasn't lieing..Syd had some interesting friends... the world needs more Duggie fields in my eyes (brows )

  • @user-jp5nc8zf7m
    @user-jp5nc8zf7m Před 7 měsíci +4

    He doesn't actually say where this notion of 'unlimited possibilities' comes from, did Syd SAY it, or is that his interpretation of Syds behavour? In the Anthony Phillips interview the guy talks about how having 'deadlines' is helpful because the way he spoke was that artists, whether painters or musicians, have a hard time 'finishing'. I remember taking an aesthetics course a long time ago, and while the commercial world likes 'pieces of art' to be sold, the focus seemed very much on 'art' being a 'process'. Syd couldn't decide which 'process' to engage in, since it limits from others. Of course such a person may say the 'imagination' is the ultimate 'processor'. I remembe a Star Trek where they had a planet where people could just 'imagine' a work of art or music and it was created by technology. Was that art or technology or something else? As far as I know, such questions about the nature of 'art' have never been resolved, I'm not sure CAN be.
    Matthew Arnold said that 'the artist is never heard, only overheard'. Is it art if nobody sees it? From OUR perspective its not, but is the artists perception the most pure, or the other? Syd in particular symbolizes this important distinction, because as Dave says of his music, you DON"T actually hear the genius of the song in the engineering of it. In hearing it we are seeing only the echoes of the original song in Syds head, which may only be an echo of what the song was 'originally'. Not sure that makes sense or is fairly elementary pop philosophy it just came into my head when he said that about Syd. I remember Roger Waters saying that Peter Gabrliel was Genesis 'Syd Barrett', but lately I'm wondering if Anthony Phillips is a closer analogy (not that it really matters, its just interesting).

    • @nuvotion-live
      @nuvotion-live Před 3 měsíci +1

      I think he was projecting in that sense. If you read other interviews it’s something Duggie articulates about his own process and work.

  • @gilibertopaparauchas5959

    The interviewer kinda sounds like gilmour

  • @martyguy8185
    @martyguy8185 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Such an intelligent man

  • @benw-king3380
    @benw-king3380 Před rokem +5

    So much supposition about SB. 'Why couldn't people do this, why couldn't they do that?' I think that what gets missed in this is that everybody was very young. Was everybody caught up in their own 21 year old lives? I would have thought so. It was a fairly tumultuous time. Even with all the help available now for people with mental health issues, it's not always easy to know what to do - we shouldn't underestimate the role fear and confusion might have played in the minds of those around him. Duggie Fields mentioned that Syd's deterioration was subtle. But there came a point where SB was clearly in trouble - I've seen some very poignant accounts from good friends; Jenny Fabian painted a very vivid picture of the condition she found him in. People get caught up in the 'tragedy of the doomed poet,' and yes it was sad. But as more and more people from that particular scene pass on, it's worth remembering that he was loved by his folks. And his music? That is so full of joy, humour, invention and darkness, it will be around as long as there are people to hear it - kudos to Roger Waters and D. Gilmour!

    • @elle26426
      @elle26426 Před rokem +1

      Well said. I also get frustrated at comments that debate around the 'before/after Syd' as in a better or worse scenario.
      I don't think of floyd individually; they were all integral parts that brought along a special slice of the magic.

    • @benw-king3380
      @benw-king3380 Před rokem

      @@elle26426 Thank you Elle. I agree. My admiration for RW grows as he speaks out over matters of conscience and so on.

  • @benedictearlson9044
    @benedictearlson9044 Před rokem +3

    What a lovely and genuine guy Duggie was. One obvious question you didn't seem to ask John was 'are the floor boards still painted'? Any info on the flat now, it could become a popular tourist site you'd imagine.

    • @nickdebenedetto2267
      @nickdebenedetto2267 Před rokem +6

      its been asked and the answer is, the floor has been covered with another type of flooring. you can see it in the video of course. the actual floor boards themselves would be UNDER this floor and in all likelihood would still contain at least some (if not most) of the paint Syd applied. unless of course the entire floor was ripped up which is highly unlikely in an apartment building. Or, if Duggie or a hired hand stripped the paint off the floor at some point, which is possible since Syd was not careful when he painted it and left hairs and other debree to get stuck in the paint (plus it was not even finished, part of the floor remained plain).
      kinda haunting to think that the Madcap colored floor boards might be sitting under that new floor though!
      Duggie died in 2021, so I wonder who bought that apartment???
      If they were a wise businessmind, they would make a shrine to Syd there and make a fortune. restore all Syd's stuff and make it a museum type attraction!!!

    • @childrenofminervaofficial4316
      @childrenofminervaofficial4316 Před rokem +1

      As it is an apartment in a complex, I doubt the other residents would appreciate nor approve of a "Syd shrine" in their building and all the additional public traffic that would entail.

    • @benedictearlson9044
      @benedictearlson9044 Před rokem

      @@childrenofminervaofficial4316 Obviously but the impact on neighbours in such a block would be minimal and it's likely not up to them (lease dependant) - the hundreds of visitors would certainly appreciate it. Look up Forthlin Road, neighbours don't necessarily decide what happens next door or on public land outside their front windows.

  • @108grog
    @108grog Před 9 měsíci +8

    "He painted himself in."

    • @bongofury333
      @bongofury333 Před 9 měsíci

      That's what I thought. Poor sweetheart

    • @BushyHairedStranger
      @BushyHairedStranger Před 8 měsíci +1

      In my perception as a Barrett Head, Syd was NOT an “Acid Casualty”, he was a dam talented Musician~Artist who had differing ideas from what Waters wanted and the LSD use aspect was used as a scapegoat for a band shifting gears. LSD was the Blame tool.

    • @nuvotion-live
      @nuvotion-live Před 3 měsíci

      Metaphorical

    • @nuvotion-live
      @nuvotion-live Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@BushyHairedStranger this interview is one man's perspective on the issue. And it's clear in some cases he is projecting is own beliefs on the situation, as everyone does. Each interview and fact should be viewed as small parts of a complex misunderstood story. You're the only one here that said "acid causality" and anyone who says that would probably concede there is more to it than that.

    • @BushyHairedStranger
      @BushyHairedStranger Před 3 měsíci

      @@nuvotion-live Seems that was round about way of saying im right, or not wrong, and that theres more history to the story. Yup Ill concede that.

  • @seamonkey000001
    @seamonkey000001 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Didn’t even prepare the floor or sweep it 😂. 🎨

  • @bonnacon1610
    @bonnacon1610 Před 3 měsíci +4

    5:35 onwards, a very accurate description of ADHD, together with the collapse in motivation that can result from losing access to a structured environment.

  • @nononame113
    @nononame113 Před 29 dny

    This interviewee is good and credible in that he doesn't try to sensationalise or mythologise Barrett at all. There are many opportunities for him to speculate or embellish, but he doesn't.

  • @wallacelovecraft8942
    @wallacelovecraft8942 Před rokem +1

    Great interview again. I felt that even though he lived with Syd, he didn't say much about what he did. Like the whole bringing these people is one of those occasions where Syd actually went out and made or had a couple friends over so he wasn't actually in bed all the time. And the thing about someones drink being spiked, just because Syd didn't tell him about it, doesn't mean that it didn't happen to him. Syd maybe accepted that his drink was spiked but we do not know. If Syd stated that his drink was spiked then I'd believe it.
    I think him talking about how Syd was maybe doing random odd things on purpose is an interesting thing to note because that could be true. Maybe with all that he lost, the only thing that he could entertain people with, was being abnormal.
    The Duggie guy certainly has some interesting stories to tell on things in just his own life. I'm very interested in hearing about it. I wonder if you did an interview on him as well?
    Sad that he's gone now too.
    I think that room that was his, was where the photo for his first solo album was taken.

    • @TheRocknrollmaniac
      @TheRocknrollmaniac Před rokem +1

      Yeah, I think Syd's friends sometimes avoid talking too much about the bizarre aspects of Syd's behavior, and that's because they are good persons. But yes even at this point Syd wasn't entirely absent, and one could even wonder like Duggie whether Syd was doing some things on purpose, just to mess with people.
      To understand this we have to dig deeper into the psychology and not simply use labels as schizophrenia. I think Syd, among other things due to LSD, was having more and more difficulties situating himself in the world and having warm relationships with people. The world started to seem more cold and distant, the band left him, whereas he was the center of the show. The reality dawned on him, and I think it was hard for him to reflect on his position and perhaps not take things too seriously, and he acted out, instead of communicating his issues. Being a bit quirky and strange to people is also a way to communicate, it's a way to "punish" them for not understanding. There is a whole line of psychologists who consider schizophrenia as, in a way, an illness caused by inappropriate expression of one's sadism. Little by little, and after flirting with the other side of sanity for a long time, there was no coming back. The people also give up (apart from family).
      It's really sad but it is what it is; I would believe Duggie in his reasoning about the drug use at the time, people had their drinks laced, Syd perhaps had his drink laced but he certainly willingly took acid and other drugs. While it's true that one drink laced with copious amounts of LSD can certainly get you to the other side without the possibility of getting back, we will never know whether this happened to Syd.
      Rick Wright has a story of Syd going missing for a few days in summer of 67, and when he eventually emerged he was a different man, with that blank stare (another way of expressing aggression). Perhaps in these few days he either willingly took too much LSD or unwillingly. We have to keep in mind that he was 21 years old at the time, so not completely formed as a person.

  • @rdeye-rb1pe
    @rdeye-rb1pe Před 2 lety +13

    Dougie feilds contributed substantial artwork to the yellow submarine movie

    • @haroldfinch8481
      @haroldfinch8481 Před rokem

      Thanks for that info. I wasn’t aware of that.

    • @rdeye-rb1pe
      @rdeye-rb1pe Před rokem +1

      @@haroldfinch8481 oh you're welcome I love Sid I remember when I first got a guitar I think Sid to me I started making beats with that guitar sampling my licks and sampling my cords I would always throw some of his work in my beats too Sid was way ahead of his time with music and lyrics

    • @nickdebenedetto2267
      @nickdebenedetto2267 Před rokem +1

      i find ZERO evidence to support this unless you think the fact that he uses similar color patterns and psychedelic atmospheres means he contributed to Yellow Sub. FAKE NEWS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @prosperoeaton8201
      @prosperoeaton8201 Před rokem

      Will you share a source proving that this claim is accurate? I just did some searching and found absolutely nothing indicating a connection between Fields and Yellow Submarine.

    • @rdeye-rb1pe
      @rdeye-rb1pe Před rokem +3

      @@prosperoeaton8201 I was thinking of Doug seigel my apologies, huge fan of Syd Barrett, but I got Dougie duggie confused with Dougie seigel that's on me brother my bad

  • @Triple5live
    @Triple5live Před měsícem +1

    I’ve long had doubts of the drug induced psychosis theory. Why? People love to believe this stuff. And promote it, which means it might not be so accurate. And I’ve personally witnessed a few exaggerated stories from uni students having breakdowns from pot consumption, I mean, give me a break, as if. I have personally experienced stages where I was terrified to go outside or see people, which is far more scary and real than some drug damage tale. But who knows. nice interview, enjoyed the real window in.

  • @mateuszkaminski4584
    @mateuszkaminski4584 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Bed, the most important thing ....

  • @bazbarrett8103
    @bazbarrett8103 Před rokem +3

    Volume.....?

  • @xwsftassell
    @xwsftassell Před rokem

    Yeah. Much as he told me.

  • @joshjuanfifarek7382
    @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Im suprised no one asks Duggie about his work with Stanley Kubrick and his wife Christiane

  • @lastman7409
    @lastman7409 Před 5 měsíci +3

    15:38 interesting question to ask Duggie, who mentioned he had had a prescription for Mandrax. Gee wonder where Syd could've got them from?

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns Před 3 měsíci +1

      Mandrex was once widely prescribed in Europe. It was also often manufactured illegally. Barrett could have got his supply from any number of places. (In the United States it was more commonly known as Quaalude.)

  • @clintoncooper9194
    @clintoncooper9194 Před rokem +5

    the table at 30 seconds in is reminiscent of the floor from when the room's former illustrious guest lived there

  • @bryanc1975
    @bryanc1975 Před rokem +26

    I genuinely like this guy, but if I had a pair of scissors... I'm just saying...

  • @JohnDuca-dd2dm
    @JohnDuca-dd2dm Před 5 měsíci +1

    T"the madcap laughs".

  • @apotheoticoelacanth
    @apotheoticoelacanth Před 4 měsíci +3

    I watched this one again after a long time, and on this one I think I'm just a little torn. I guess I just don't know how correct the analysis is here, though I guess I'd like to think that certain things that Duggie said were true. I mean, he does seem like he frames much of this in terms of choice, and free-will. And while it is optimistic to think of the human condition in that way, depending on if you see that as an advantage, one also wonders if / or how / it would not be obvious that Syd had crossed certain psychological lines at that time, to where he just couldn't get to the point of making a choice
    Fields looks to me as though he had become something of a fully realized artist: I think I can tell that just by taking a glimpse through this interview. But I think that when you are an artist, of any kind, you are dealing with subjectivity, and you can never really escape it. So I don't know, maybe that's part of what's coming through for me here, is that Syd's state is being looked at through a lens where subjectivity ultimately predominates. But something was wrong, in more of an objective way. And maybe he was saying that in some way, but it's hard for me to tell

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před 4 měsíci

      Really insightful interesting comment. Thanks.

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns Před 3 měsíci +2

      He’s just giving his impressions from the limited time he knew Barrett. There isn’t much speculation here, and there isn’t much venturing far afield. He sounds to me candid and forthright. Of course it’s only one part of the picture, but it doesn’t pretend to be other than that.

  • @BrianSalazar-kn5ng
    @BrianSalazar-kn5ng Před měsícem

    Painted himself in… such a sad story about Sid. Drugs/Spirits/Mental Illnesses. 😢😢😢😢😢

  • @biegebythesea6775
    @biegebythesea6775 Před 20 dny

    he looks like martin short.

  • @pedrorocha9722
    @pedrorocha9722 Před rokem +7

    man.... the sound is really low.

  • @frodofraggins
    @frodofraggins Před měsícem

    I kind of wish the interviewer pressed Duggie when he kept saying Syd was "difficult". Difficult in what ways?

  • @jamesdavies5266
    @jamesdavies5266 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Ledge X

  • @frankschrodinger1424
    @frankschrodinger1424 Před rokem +2

    Who lives in that flat now? Anybody of note?

  • @robwilde6857
    @robwilde6857 Před 8 měsíci +2

    @11:40 seems to expose the "Cromwell Road" saga as a myth.

    • @jmdavison62
      @jmdavison62 Před 7 měsíci

      Yes indeed. Fields' account of this time is probably the most authoritative. Is the couple with the dubious "spiked tea" account Jenny and Nigel Lesmoir-Gordon?
      At any rate, this is one of the most important of John Edginton interviews on Barrett, all of which are excellent and which provide a remarkable degree of insight that complements the available literature.

    • @tomtaba5564
      @tomtaba5564 Před měsícem

      He admits to hearing of others being spiked with acid, though..
      And he says "he didn't perceive" that thing, happening to Syd.
      Not perceiving something, during 1967,
      does not mean it didn't exist.

  • @tomtaba5564
    @tomtaba5564 Před měsícem +3

    About the Cromwell Road reference:
    He admits to hearing of others being spiked with acid, though..
    And he says "he didn't perceive" that thing, happening to Syd.
    Not perceiving something, during 1967,
    does not mean it didn't happen.

  • @davidrobinson293
    @davidrobinson293 Před 2 lety +8

    When you live with someone for so long you don't believe all the urban myths and apocryphal stories. It isn't all down to acid consumption alone!

    • @Astro-X
      @Astro-X Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah but without acid he wouldn't have reclused.

    • @datboyrains5657
      @datboyrains5657 Před rokem +3

      @@Astro-X acid wasn’t the whole reason the situation with syd took place.

    • @colourfaze86
      @colourfaze86 Před rokem

      @@datboyrains5657 He was born with schizophrenia. Just not diagnosed until his 30s. Imagine taking acid and being schizophrenic. It'd be a wonder to ever come back down.

    • @nickdebenedetto2267
      @nickdebenedetto2267 Před rokem +3

      @@colourfaze86 he was NEVER "diagnosed" as a schizo! where do u people get your info and why do u think its okay to just repeat fake news u hear?? ugh, you're ruining the Internet with all your misinformation pollution!!!

  • @user-jr3eb5oo3g
    @user-jr3eb5oo3g Před 4 měsíci

    I watched all he interviews with band members and various other friends , flatmates, etc of Syds and I have never heard one mention of a girlfried. Didnt Syd have girlfriends to help him ?

    • @thomasgary1219
      @thomasgary1219 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Syd had sex with lots of women, but no real " girlfriends " . I also suspect that he was definitely bisexual.

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns Před 3 měsíci +1

      Listen to this interview again. It mentions a girlfriend. Notice also that that Nick Mason’s, David Gilmour’s, Richard Wright’s, and Roger Water’s interviews don’t mention their own girlfriends either. Waters and maybe someone else briefly mention a wife, but they had to have had girlfriends first. They just don’t seem to have figured into the story.

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@thomasgary1219 Evidence of bisexuality would require something like a boyfriend. Absence of any significant sexual relation at all isn’t evidence of homosexuality or bisexuality. Quite the opposite.

    • @craigl5729
      @craigl5729 Před 24 dny +1

      @@thomasgary1219 you dont know your subject,Syd had 4 serious girlfriends in his life ..

  • @fatbelly27
    @fatbelly27 Před rokem +1

    I didn't know Duggie had died. Sad. It was during the pandemic. Was it covid?

  • @timflippance3040
    @timflippance3040 Před rokem +3

    I understood that it wasn't so much the acid per se that destroyed him, rather that on one occasion he went for a whole week without sleeping and took acid every day. It is well known that going without sleep for long periods damages your brain, so the combination of no sleep and constant tripping would have been lethal. Other members of Pink Floyd have said that after that event his eyes were permanently blank. How this fits in with Duggie's statement that the decline was slow I'm not sure.

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před rokem +2

      PF members were talking about a time when Syd was still in the band. He lived with Duggie after he left.

    • @timflippance3040
      @timflippance3040 Před rokem

      @@JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES OK

    • @wolfgangdevries127
      @wolfgangdevries127 Před rokem

      Well, it was a great marketing story. After all. For both Floyd and Duggie.

  • @fredfloyd34
    @fredfloyd34 Před měsícem

    Volume too low..

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před měsícem

      @fredfloyd34 I can reupload this and enhance the volume but first can I ask you - what device are you playing it on ? Thanks

  • @justmadeit2
    @justmadeit2 Před 2 lety +2

    Interviewer sounds a bit like David Gilmour. I do art myself, see the folder on my channel in the Playlist part titled my art poems etc. Over n out

  • @Josouto1
    @Josouto1 Před rokem +8

    Interesting what he says about acid, that Syd was not such a big consumer as other acquaintences. There is a big of a myth, we do not know what happened to him, he could have been squizofrenic and that might not have had any relation to drugs. Studies nowadays have been confirming that acid or other allucinogenous drugs actually bring benefits to the brain

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 Před rokem

      There was a reason why the CIA delivered LSD to the 60s generation, and that was to mess with their minds and create chaos, and they achieved their goal. The goal of our masonic overlords is 'Ordo Ab Chao'. Drugs create chaos. Another way of putting it, create the problem and come in with the solution...increased law and order. I call it jobs for the boys. LSD doesn't expand the mind just like Buddhist meditation doesn't. Anything that operates on feelings, not facts, does not expand the mind.

    • @husq48
      @husq48 Před rokem +2

      There are conflicting studies about everything.

    • @Stewartchampion
      @Stewartchampion Před rokem

      Acid can be beneficial in the right set and setting tho...taken in a bad environment...and if the person is slightly unhinged etc..can ruin the person for the rest of the life...like any drug.....and alot of the people they do these studies on have never taken drugs ..or Acid...so it's like anything....take things with precaution...be carful .but Acid and all drugs work differently on different people..I generally have nothing but good times with Acid and shrooms etc...but i know of people that barely did it and it had bad effects on them...that they never got out of...same with weed .especially these days...its apparently safe ..but it causes some people nothing but problems.one of the worse in my eyes tho is alcohol....it is a very destructive drug...yet it's legal... if alcohol came about now...and no one had ever saw someone drunk etc...it would be classed as evil...strange world..what can work for one ..doesn't all ways work for others

    • @xo_ecstasy
      @xo_ecstasy Před rokem

      yes, while that is true, acid can trigger schizophrenia* that hasn’t developed if you have it. i’ve seen it happen with my own eyes

  • @scottmooneyham5521
    @scottmooneyham5521 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Scientists know very little about how LSD affects the brain. What they do know, when it is in the system: communication between the various parts of the brain is increased, but activity in the pre-frontal cortex decreases significantly. The pre-frontal cortex controls decision-making, planning and higher social functioning. Syd Barrett clearly saw those abilities rapidly decrease, and this interview makes that clear. He also likely suffered from HPPD, which explains his “coming and going.” Everyone’s brain chemistry is different. Just because someone else took more acid and came out of it does not mean acid was not the ultimate cause of his break. He took a lot. That is well documented. As other friends said, he lived with “messianic acid freaks.”

    • @dereksupernaut
      @dereksupernaut Před 11 měsíci +2

      what do you mean by "break"? his fat/pale appearance is easily attributed to a life devoid of manual labor with enough wealth to eat all the candy he wants... Rolling Stone released a Pink Floy tribute magazine containing a 1970 interview with Syd, he claims he had trouble finding people to play with and was a big fan of Hendrix (must be right before he died); the first sounds crazy given how popular he was but the second point of view sounds stone cold sober... i find Syd to be brilliant mostly off the first Floyd album (i haven't heard his 2 solo albums yet), with a peak equal to that of John Lennon, Jimi Hendrix, and Kurt Cobain; the greatest musicians in rock... i find his famous solo songs like "Octopus" to also be brilliant if you love Hard Rock & Whimsical Art, as if he's Alice in Wonderland's favorite rocker... i like to think maybe he was a true artist and had zero interest in being a pop star with its "play the hits on command" being the true sign of insanity... fax!!!

    • @scottmooneyham5521
      @scottmooneyham5521 Před 11 měsíci +2

      You can like to think that all you want. He was institutionalized at least once, his mother left her house for roughly a year to live with his sister because she couldn’t deal with his outbursts, he himself wrote that he had “tattooed my brain all the way,” and that “I’m most obliged for you making it clear that I am not here,” he also acknowledged, repeatedly, that he could no longer make decisions. He had trouble finding people to play with because he couldn’t maintain a train of thought for more than 30 seconds, not just in speaking but in playing. He went from being a vibrant, gregarious, incredibly social and talented human being to withdrawn and barely able to function. That he had some days or some hours better than others doesn’t change that. This, “Oh, he was a visionary who turned his back on fame and existed at a higher plane,” is stupid hippy garbage. He was a acid casualty, like Peter Green and Dennis Wilson.

    • @israelruelas5756
      @israelruelas5756 Před 11 měsíci

      What brain “chemistry” are you speaking of?

  • @ezekialalvarado2444
    @ezekialalvarado2444 Před rokem +6

    And here it is ladies and gentlemen.....the interview pink Floyd doesn't want you to see or hear

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před rokem +2

      Not true .. so what’s your point ?

    • @ezekialalvarado2444
      @ezekialalvarado2444 Před rokem +5

      @@JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES my point is. At this point syd was supposed to be incoherent and not even there, according to Roger waters and co. That syd took too much and couldn't even function or think. The music he made in that time says otherwise and so does his own roommate who is unbiased in this situation. Also finding out that the tea cup story isn't true. Who peddled it? And who benefited from the image and portrayal of syd being that way? Only a few folks who are still bickering about selling their catalog for more millions when the man who started this is still in the grave not giving a shit a bout any of it. Just because they wrote the wall doesn't mean they cared about syd. They just made more money off of his image and fucked w him even more. Why do you think syd wanted to be left alone? All the pain his supposed "friends" caused him.

    • @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES
      @JOHNEDGINTONDOCUMENTARIES  Před rokem +6

      @@ezekialalvarado2444 thanks. That’s a very dark view of PF which you’re entitled to of course. I get a clear sense of Syd taking less LSD during this post-Floyd period and so being more functional. He found his creative spark again - with help and encouragement from Gilmour .

    • @waynesilverman3048
      @waynesilverman3048 Před rokem +1

      Well how does Roger know syd heard voices ,too many bad trips,I think syd loved lsd being an artist se e ing the colours ect ,he even had a good acid trip at this time 69 with Mick rock so he couldn't of been as bad as Roger said .And the spiking maybe it was a rumour but mad jock strongly dents it .

  • @mollyh9259
    @mollyh9259 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Correct me if I"m wrong, but he didn't see the change, like he wasn't friends/flat mates with Syd until after his change in '67. The damage it seems had been done by then.

    • @BushyHairedStranger
      @BushyHairedStranger Před 8 měsíci +3

      So theres many here that had a very different view to the whole “SYD BARRETT MYTHOS”,…theres plenty of people, Duggie seemingly included, and other close friends, who have very different views to what happened around this “crazy artist” narrative who broke down psychologically at a young age. The reasons for Syds departure from the Floyd are more saga than fact….people like to promote Fairy Tales especially this one.

    • @mollyh9259
      @mollyh9259 Před 7 měsíci

      @@BushyHairedStranger Maybe it's too sad to think of such a loss of this brilliant artist due to synthetic pharma, a similar tragedy happened to my cousin. He still lives but is gone in the same way.

    • @BushyHairedStranger
      @BushyHairedStranger Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@mollyh9259 nope, Syd had a brilliant career and to say anything less is an insult. Scapegoating LSD is a weak demonizing tactic, and heres why; hundreds of thousands have had extremely GOOD, HEALING, POSITIVE experiences on LSD so don’t throw the baby our with the bath water…
      I just don’t ascribe to rumor. To each their own.

    • @mollyh9259
      @mollyh9259 Před 7 měsíci

      No offense intended, seems there is disagreement among those closest to him. Nevertheless, he made his mark for sure. I love his songs post Floyd.

    • @OrbvsTomarvm
      @OrbvsTomarvm Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@mollyh9259 syd got the bums rush off the floyd. his family stated he never went mad but was on the autism spectrum, in which case he did amazingly well considering how badly he was betrayed and let down. fair play to him for not making a big deal out of it and airing the dirty laundry like the rest of the band love doing. pink floyd is a self mythologised entity that only broke traction years after when they eventually came up with a great album. syd paved the way for everything and he should not be allowed to be thrown under the bus anymore. they got their dark side, shine on and their multi millions. time to stop the manipulation of such a good man.

  • @Tarsus790
    @Tarsus790 Před 2 lety +5

    I would feel terrible if I was an artist and I was best known for living with an artist.

    • @Ukedc259
      @Ukedc259 Před 2 lety +9

      He was a very good artist actually.

    • @emptypromises2962
      @emptypromises2962 Před rokem +9

      Duggie certainly doesn't come off as feeling terrible for being known as Syd's friend. Rather, he seems to be very content about where he is in life and actually really confident in himself. I like him, he seems quite genuine. I felt sorry to read about his passing.

    • @nickdebenedetto2267
      @nickdebenedetto2267 Před rokem +4

      Duggie Fields was quite successful in his own rite and was in no way bitter, jealous etc. in many ways he was MORE successful than Syd in the big picture unless you are judging by degrees of fame over output or duration

    • @will2741
      @will2741 Před rokem +3

      only for Syd fans. Duggie Fields was very well known in art circles

  • @joshjuanfifarek7382
    @joshjuanfifarek7382 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I think it's odd Duggie didnt speak of the STP that is what really put syds psyche in harms way
    This is known as a fact. STP was making its way around London in 68.

    • @AnthonyMonaghan
      @AnthonyMonaghan Před 9 měsíci +5

      Says who? You're making this shit up bud.

    • @robwilde6857
      @robwilde6857 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@AnthonyMonaghan Check out Pete Townshend's interview with Melvyn Bragg. At 27:52 he talks about his horrible experience talking STP on the plane back from Montery Festival, so we know it was headed for the UK as early as June 1967.
      Given Barrett's willingness to try any concoction, it's not outside the realms of possibility he would end up taking it.

    • @BushyHairedStranger
      @BushyHairedStranger Před 8 měsíci

      @@robwilde6857please link your sources; the video or pdf info for your claims. STP(DOM) was in very limited distribution in 1967. I know who synthesized those batches, & when & where they were released…1st batch was released in 20mg into the haight on June 22nd 1967, the 2nd batch was lowered by 50% dosage (10mg)

    • @robwilde6857
      @robwilde6857 Před 8 měsíci

      @@BushyHairedStranger I don't think I can post a link in the comments.
      The interview is titled: "Pete Townshend - Melvyn Bragg interview (August 29, 1974)"
      "MIKE LEONARD: SYD BARRETT & PINK FLOYD'S LANDLORD INTERVIEWED IN THE SAME HOUSE IN 2001" @3:20 for Barrett's willingness to experiment.
      The was an interview on here with Nick Mason where he also mentions the possibility that Barrett might have taken STP but it has been deleted.

    • @jmdavison62
      @jmdavison62 Před 7 měsíci

      @@AnthonyMonaghan No, Nick Mason even mentioned it once. Peter Wynne-Wilson claims that he and Barrett took STP in San Francisco, during Pink Floyd's disastrous first tour of the United States.

  • @christianbelena
    @christianbelena Před rokem +4

    Is Duggie the offspring of Mr. Spock and a Hobbit?

  • @JohnDuca-dd2dm
    @JohnDuca-dd2dm Před 5 měsíci +1

    not toooo fascinating.

  • @JohnDuca-dd2dm
    @JohnDuca-dd2dm Před 5 měsíci +1

    ........... s little boring.

  • @profquad
    @profquad Před 2 lety +2

    he obviously hated living with him

  • @Tarsus790
    @Tarsus790 Před 2 lety

    To work prolifically like he speaks is drudgery and ruins creativity art and its energy inspiration and production happens spasmodically like Syd would create. Lol this dude seems a real drag and quite frankly I pity him in a way.

    • @thomashahn631
      @thomashahn631 Před rokem +3

      van gogh was prolific the last two years of his life; so was doestoyevsky., beethoven, bach over many years....don't agree with you at all. There are no one ways to anything.

    • @carlosimotti3933
      @carlosimotti3933 Před rokem +1

      Picasso said genius is 1% talent and 99% discipline so...I think you mistake a decadent lazyness for creativity

  • @user-bv9ci8yq2w
    @user-bv9ci8yq2w Před měsícem

    Is that the flat were sid painted the floors